In many Weslaco-area construction settings—warehouse work, commercial renovations, tenant build-outs, and maintenance projects—scaffolding is rarely owned by just one person. It may be supplied by an equipment vendor, assembled by a specialty crew, and used under a general contractor’s site rules.
That matters because insurance adjusters often try to narrow fault to the injured worker or a single crew. But scaffolding incidents frequently involve questions like:
- Who had control over the work platform and access route?
- Who was responsible for inspections before use and after changes?
- Were guardrails, proper decking, and safe access actually provided for the specific task being performed?
A strong claim in Texas usually requires tying the unsafe condition to the fall and the injuries—not just showing that a fall occurred.


